A witness of the mass shooting on Bourbon Street captured the aftermath on his cell phone. (WARNING: Images may be too graphic for some viewers)

A photo of one of the victims who suffered a graze wound to her face. Several bystanders stand nearby, helping the victim.

NEW ORLEANS -

A man who witnessed Sunday’s shooting on Bourbon Street described the terrifying moments when gunfire erupted in the French Quarter.

“I don't really know what to think about it. I'm kind of desensitized to it to be honest with you,” said David Minsky, a local bartender and freelance journalist living in New Orleans.

Gunshots erupted about 2:45 a.m. Sunday in the 700 block of Bourbon Street. Ten people were injured in the shooting, police said. According to the New Orleans Police Department, two men are sought in the shooting that spawned from an argument between them.

“While everyone else was running away, I was running toward the gunfire,” Minsky said. “And, I don't know, being a curious guy -- that's what I wanted to do -- see what was going on basically.”

Minsky described the ordeal as “surreal,” saying he’d never seen multiple people get shot.

“There was a lot of blood, I can tell you that much, you know. And I actually stepped in a pool of blood and didn't realize it until I was walking toward the person shot in the face,” Minksey said. “That kind of freaked me out a little bit.”

He also captured an image of an unresponsive woman lying in the middle of the 700 block of Bourbon Street.

During the chaotic moments after the shooting, Minsky said there weren’t many screams in the Vieux Carré.

“There was just a lot of people running around and trying to help each other,” he said. “The person that was shot in the face was probably the person getting the most attention at that immediate moment. But as far as the screams and commotion, I mean, yeah, there are people running and screaming but that all died down after the gunshots ended.”

New Orleans police released several surveillance images of the shooting. In the surveillance video on Bourbon Street, a man can be seen firing a gun as he walked backward, continuing to fire his weapon.

“He looks like the guy that ran right past me,” Minksy said. “Actually, there were two guys. One guy ran. The first guy ran past me and I didn't get a good look at him. But the second guy ran behind him and right behind that guy was a cop, but the second guy looked like the guy in the video.”

While the shooting has taken a national spotlight, Minsky said he’s become desensitized to the violence, not just in New Orleans, but across the country.

“I've lived here for a while, and people try to compare this to mass shootings or Columbine or Aurora, Colorado, but it's a little bit different. It happens so frequently around here that people are just like, 'Oh yeah. It's another shooting.’”

While Minksy admits the city has a crime problem, he doesn’t believe there is a simple solution to fix the issue.

“I think there are too many factors to really even consider here,” he said. “I don't think it's just police or I don't think it's just simply guns. There's just too many things to talk about.”

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